Sunday, 4 September 2016

The Prime Minister said the country needs a period of stability after the shockwaves of the Brexit vote

political correspondent(es/wp):
Theresa May has insisted there will be no snap election before 2020 as she dashed Remain supporters’ hopes of a fresh vote before the EU withdrawal  process formally begins.
The Prime Minister said the country needs a period of stability after the shockwaves of the Brexit vote.
And in her first major interview since taking office, she said the UK should be prepared for “difficult times” ahead despite recent positive economic indicators.
She told the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show: “I'm not going to be calling a snap election. I've been very clear that I think we need that period of time, that stability - to be able to deal with the issues that the country is facing and have that election in 2020.”
Mrs May, who said she will not formally trigger withdrawal negotiations by invoking Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty before the end of this year, acknowledged voters wanted to see the process under way.

"I'm very clear also that the British people don't want the issue of Article 50 being triggered just being kicked into the long grass because they want to know we're getting on with the job of - of putting Brexit into place and making a success of it."
She said the Scottish people did not want another vote on independence, and again firmly ruled out a second EU referendum.
The PM also warned it would not be "plain sailing" despite some encouraging economic data.
"We have had some good figures and better figures that some had predicted would be the case. I'm not going to pretend that it's all going to be plain sailing. I think we must be prepared for the fact that there may be some difficult times ahead. But what I am is optimistic."
Mrs May insisted controls on the movement of people from the EU to Britain needed to be imposed as part of an exit deal with Brussels.
She said: "What the vote, what leaving the European Union does enable us to do is, yes, to say what I think the British people are very clear about, which is that they don't want free movement to continue in the way that it has done in the past.
"They do want to see controls of movement of people coming in from the European Union. Now, obviously we're looking at what - what those options are, what that might be.

"But people also want to see the job opportunities, to see the economic opportunities, and so getting a good deal in trading goods and services is also obviously important for us," the PM said in an interview recorded in her constituency before she headed to China for the G20 summit.
Her comments come as Brexit Secretary David Davis is due to make a statement to the Commons this week on the government’s emerging position on the terms of withdrawal from Brussels.

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